Q: My six- and four-year olds would like to know if "octopus have
teeth"? (Margie, Fallston, Maryland)
A:
An octopus has up to four kinds of teeth (none like ours), and, like birds, has a
beak which can tear pieces from prey, and even break shells. The beak is below his eye
(see image) where his eight legs join his head like wheel spokes to a hub.
The underside of an octopus showing his mouth and beak. Photo courtesy of Roy
Caldwell, copyright, used with permission.
Cracking a crab's shell is easy work for an octopus' strong beak (made of the
same hard stuff as a lobster's shell). One shell-crushing bite can kill a
crab.
On the other hand, a clam's shell defeats the beak. But the octopus
still wins, because he does have teeth, indeed, depending on the species:
up to four types. He may start the hole with saw-like teeth on his tongue
(the radula) "but most of the drilling is carried out by the salivary papilla
[small teeth-like bumps in his mouth]," emails biologist
Roy Caldwell, a professor at the University of California at Berkeley.
He uses these and more teeth located at the turned-inside-out tip of the
salivary duct to drill the actual hole. The salivary teeth also push
corrosive saliva forward to the drill site, where the saliva attacks the shell.
Then, having penetrated the shell, the octopus sucks out clam flesh.
Here's a
diagram (courtesy of the Tree of Life) showing the beak, salivary gland and
duct.
Furthermore, besides those three possible kinds of teeth, sucker rims are
"armed with hooks or teeth" in some octopus, Caldwell says. That makes
four possible kinds of small teeth — not like ours
but effective.
How does an octopus fare against a 5-foot shark and her
thousands of sharp
teeth? Click the
video to see. Courtesy of Stevan Hogg and the Seattle Aquarium.
Further Reading:
Roy Caldwell, "Death in a Pretty Package: The Blue-Ringed Octopuses."
Freshwater and Marine Aquarium Magazine, 23 (3): 8-18.
Octopus digestive system, Tree of Life
Octopus gnashers (beak), Pharyngula
Octopodids, Australian Biological Resources Study
Giant Pacific octopus, National Parks Conservation Association
Q: Does eye color affect vision? (Colleen, Austin, Texas)
Q: Does the color of the eye
affect the way you see? Do more
people with one color of eyes see better or worse then people with a different
color? (Alyssa, Laredo, Texas)
Dark-eyed people may do better at reactive sports like boxing. Ricardo
Dominguez (left) rallied late to win over Rafael Ortiz in a lightweight matchup
put on for the Marines. Sep. 8, 2005, Camp Pendleton, California. Photo courtesy
of Shawnc and Wikipedia.
A: Light-eyed people are
more sensitive to light, because they have few pigments to protect their eyes
from sunlight exposure. So, such people can encounter sun-related
problems, like developing cataracts, as they age.
Eye color may affect vision involved in sports (more about this in a moment).
Albinism certainly affects vision acuity.
Albinism (an inherited condition where the person is born either completely
lacking or has little pigment in his eyes, skin or hair) can be linked with eye
problems. Albinism exists in many forms; most (especially the oculocutaneous
form) are linked with vision problems. The oculocutaneous albino may have
light sensitivity, a lack of visual acuity, and erratic eye movement. In
the USA, about one in 17,000 people is an albino.
Finally, "There have been some reports about eye-colour effect on reaction
time. However, these reports are mixed, about half see some effect, the
others not," emails biologist
Richard A. Sturm,
principal research fellow of the Institute for Molecular Bioscience at the
University of Queensland in Australia. I'm no expert in the area, but I
suspect there's some truth in it." This is interesting, because surely
vision influences how fast we react to something.
Sturm sent me eight reaction-time studies, of which five found that eye color
affected how well people reacted in various sports. In general, light eyed
people did better on self-paced tasks (bowling, golf, pitching baseballs), and
dark-eyed people did better on reactive tasks (boxing, hitting a ball, defensive
football positions). Here's a few of the results:
- Dark-eyed men (61 college students tested at the University of Louisville,
Kentucky) hit a tennis ball better than light-eyed men in forehand rallies.
- Light-eyed kids did better at self-paced activities; dark-eyed youngsters
did better at reactive activities (Fort Hays State University, Kansas)
- Dark-eyed students hit a target with a frisbee more times than light-eyed
students.
By the way, two other investigations found a correlation between eye color and behavior.
Blue eyed children in these studies were more inhibited than brown eyed
children.
Further Reading:
How does albinism affect the eyes? About vision
Ball color, eye color and a reactive motor skill, Percept Mot Skills
Effects of eye color on the accuracy of ball throwing of elementary school
children, Percept Mot Skills